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  1. Hip hip hooray (also hippity hip hooray; hooray may also be spelled and pronounced hoorah, hurrah, hurray etc.) is a cheer called out to express congratulation toward someone or something, in the English-speaking world and elsewhere. By a sole speaker, it is a form of interjection.

  2. Presenting Full video Song "Hip Hip Hurrah" from the movie "Mere Dad Ki Maruti" Sung by Sonu KakkarSong: Hip Hip HurrahDirected by: Ashima ChibberLyrics by: ...

  3. Hip, Hip, Hurrah! (Danish: Hip, hip, hurra! Kunstnerfest på Skagen, pronounced [ˈhip ˈhip huˈʁɑ ˈkʰɔnstnɐˌfest pʰɔː ˈskɛːˀjn̩]) is an oil-on-canvas painting from 1888 by Danish painter Peder Severin Krøyer.

  4. an expression that is called out, often by a group of people at the same time, to express approval of someone: Three cheers for the bride and groom! Hip, hip, hooray! At last we were on the road again. Hip, hip, hooray! Hip, hip, hurray for Flora! The crowd was cheering " Hip, hip, hooray!" for the prince. Three cheers for the prime minister!

  5. Sep 28, 2024 · hip hip hooray An exclamation of congratulations or celebration , especially in response to a call for " three cheers for" the person. Often the person calling for the cheers will yell "Hip!

  6. The call was recorded in England in the beginning of the 19th century in connection with making a toast. It has been suggested that the word “hip” stems from a medieval Latin acronym, “ Hierosolyma Est Perdita ”, meaning “Jerusalem is lost”, a term that gained notoriety in the German Hep hep riots.

  7. Hip, hip, hurrah! An exclamation of praise, congratulations, or celebration. Often said as a call-and-response, in which one person prompts with "hip, hip," while the other person or people respond with "hurrah!"

  8. Noun. A cry or cheer of ‘hip hip hooray!’. interjection. 1819–. Used as a communal cheer. Later also used parenthetically (sometimes ironically) to express joy or approval. Often delivered in call-and-response style, with the caller shouting hip hip and the responders replying hooray! 1819.

  9. This way of starting a communal cheer has been around since the 18th century but no one knows why the cheer (hooray or hurrah) is preceded by the words hip hip. The story that the cry “hip, hip” was the anti-Semitic war cry of the Teutonic knights dating back to The Middle Ages is pure nonsense.

  10. An exclamation of praise, congratulations, or celebration. Often said as a call-and-response, in which one person prompts with "hip, hip," while the other person or people respond with "Hooray!" A: "Three cheers for Sarah, the savior of the company!